TECH PEOPLE LEADERSHIP NEWSLETTER
A weekly newsletter of curated links giving help, advice and opinion to leaders in teh tech industry.
THE ARCHIVE
FEEDBACK
13 Questions to Get More Feedback From Your Team - Programming Leadership - Medium
Easy read, useful stuff. Exactly what it says - ways to start the “I want feedback” conversation with your team.
Disrupting Bias in Feedback — Jill Wetzler
A cool, practical post outlining specific ways to notice, and then disrupt our own biases when giving feedback. Great piece.
MEETINGS
This may be a bit abstract, but I love the title, and it’s a great read.
“…the majority of people in our world say and do what they do from their own set of fears, conclusions, defenses and attempts to survive. Most of it, even when aimed directly at us, has nothing to do with us”
Tough love from A16Z. Yes, we should give people the benefit of the doubt. But we almost always, at least early in our careers, overdo it.
“So what do you do when you start getting this pit in your stomach that the senior executive you had so much hope for — that was going to take your darling, ambitious, visionary startup to the next level — might not be doing, well, exactly that?
You fire them”
Results of a recent poll of what managers find hard. Pretty interesting. Communication is the core of the job. And it’s hard.
“a full 69% of respondents said that they found “communicating in general” to be the hardest part about communicating with employees”
Yes, a listicle, but a good, practical one: excellent questions for going deeper into conversations with team members and co-workers. And the author’s book - The Coaching Habit - is a very neat introduction to coaching at work. Worth checking.
Nobel laureate Daniel Kahneman spent decades looking at all the ways we incorrectly think we know what we’re thinking (see “Thinking Fast and Slow” for the gospel). This is a neat discussion about when we might “trust our gut” (not a lot) and when we might want to think things through some more.
A kind of (much) shorter version of the above post. Nice summary.
“Intuition can be thought of as subconscious pattern matching, honed over weeks, years, and decades. The more we are within our circle of competence the more likely our intuition proves correct”